[Great Britain and the American Civil War by Ephraim Douglass Adams]@TWC D-Link book
Great Britain and the American Civil War

CHAPTER X
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Lyons to Stuart, July 5, 1862.
"Public opinion will not allow the Government to do more for the North than maintain a strict neutrality, and it may not be easy to do that if there comes any strong provocation from the U.S.

..." "However, the real question of the day is cotton...." "The problem is of how to get over _this next_ winter.

The prospects of the manufacturing districts are very gloomy." "...If you can manage in any way to get a supply of cotton for England before the winter, you will have done a greater service than has been effected by Diplomacy for a century; but nobody expects it." ] [Footnote 703: _A Cycle of Adams' Letters_, I, 166.

To his son, July 18, 1862.

He noted that the news had come by the _Glasgow_ which had sailed for England on July 5, whereas the papers contained also a telegram from McClellan's head-quarters, dated July 7, but "the people here are fully ready to credit anything that is not favourable." Newspaper headings were "Capitulation of McClellan's Army.


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